Monday, March 14, 2011
Final Coleman Project Documentation
Course Review
Monday, March 7, 2011
Coleman Project Coming To An End
http://dpizzodesign.blogspot.com/
http://efdsgnw11.blogspot.com/
http://kabauer.tumblr.com/
http://kursinskis.blogspot.com/This past week we have been wrapping up our Coleman project. We were able to get a lot accomplished by working well together and listening to everyone's opinions. Some final decisions were made concerning logo, kiosk, and packaging. I contributed to the project by helping come up with logo ideas and doing research on technology that we would be using in the washer.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Heskett Chapter 9 and 10
Coleman Project
Danny Pizzo
Elissa Francis
Kevin Bauer
Nick Kursinskis
So this past week we started brainstorming for the Coleman project. We came up with a list of ideas (portable couch, bed that turns into a desk, and washer/dryer combo). All of our ideas were based upon the need for space in a dorm room. Trying to connect Coleman to our idea we came up with making your dorm close to home. We decided on the washer/dryer combo in the end. The team as a whole has been working together really well. There really is not one person who is too power hungry and we are able to share our ideas with each other and give honest feedback. I have been giving ideas and feedback just like everyone else has been. I have also brought in websites that I have found that we could possibly use as inspiration. Right now we have not taken any pictures of our work and we do not have any actual sketches to share. For right now I feel good about our project and whats going on.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Online Scavenger Hunt
Cabela's
Bass Pro Shops
Gander Mountain
Dick's Sporting Goods
Coleman
Indoor Homegoods
Bed Bath and Beyond
The Great Indoors
Whirlpool
Pier1
Crate and Barrel
A indoor home goods are items that are functional and easy to use that helps make your home more comfortable.
Monday, February 21, 2011
McDonough: Chapters 4-6
CR07
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Monday, February 14, 2011
Copyrights and Patents
Cradle to Cradle- chapters 1-3
Saturday, February 12, 2011
Media Review
This video started out with the basic introduction to the color wheel and the spectrum of warm and cool colors. She then introduced the colors in the warm spectrum: red, orange, and yellow. She went through each of these colors and told what room they work best in because of the mood they set. The same was done for the colors blue, green, and indigo. Then she went on to explain white, and how black and brown is used in rooms to help ground the other colors in a room.
http://www.ideas-for-home-decorating.com/index.html
This website covers the color schemes and how to choose the right colors for decorating. It goes over the color wheel, color theory, warm and cool colors, similarities, and differences and contrasts. It explains how to use a color chart and the different kinds you are able to use like the blue color chart, green color chart, red color chart, orange violet pink color chart, yellow color chart, and neutral color chart. Each of these charts go through and outlines the different tones to that specific color. This website goes a little bit more in depth than just telling about what the color wheel is.
http://besthomegallery.com/interior/interior-design-ideas-with-neutral-colors-in-modern-homes/ This page from a website explains how you can use neutral tones for decorating. It explains the neutral colors are whites, creams, tans, or beiges and these colors can work well in modern, contemporary, or classic homes. Adding a dark color can add sophistication to the room, or you can decorate using neutral colored furniture. This page gives more options than using the color wheel to decide on a color scheme.
http://www.color.interiordezine.com/colorschemes/split-complementary-color-scheme.html
This page from a website gives examples on how you can use complementary color combinations for a room. It shows how using patterns and textures can have an effect on the colors being used. This page gives the viewer several different pictures on bedrooms with different color schemes so that way it is easy to vision what they are talking about. Some of the examples include floral with polka dots, combining patterns, and a tropical/ Caribbean color scheme. This website also offers articles on color, color schemes, color theory, and color resources that you can use to find books, websites, and magazines.
http://colorindesign.net/2010/04/13/color-schemes-for-interiors-analogous/
This is a blog page that helps with the understanding of analogous color schemes. Within the analogous color schemes there can be warm and cool colors and it gives pictures of how the warm and cool colors can be used in separate schemes. Then it also shows how you can mix the warm and cool colors together. It also goes into what kind of accent colors go well with the analogous color schemes and these colors often fall in the complementary color range.
Sunday, February 6, 2011
50 Things
1. side rooms have carpeting
2. doorways going from room to room are made of cement
3. there are information centers on ground and 1st floors
4. pillars are made of cement
5. there are restrooms located on each floor
6. there are signs pointing towards the restrooms
7. outlets on sides on the chair/lamp stands
8. there are exit signs near exit doors
9. fire alarm lights in each side room
10. individual rooms have signs with a room number
11. there are signs hanging from the ceiling telling you what you can find there; ex. Microforms
12. outlets built into the floor, and they are covered by tables
13. outlets built into the ceiling
14. stair case has lights hanging off of each step
15. sprinkler system
16. speakers on the ceiling
17. railing goes around the upper floors
18.stair case has glass enclosure with rails
19. elevators for going to higher floors
20. railings for upper floors have heavy wire crossing poles horizontally
21. there is a floor directory on ground and 1st floors
22. part of the ceiling is made up of glass windows
23. part of the wall is made up of glass windows
24. there are desk top computers on some floors
25. the stair case is made up of hard flooring
26. the main walk ways are hard flooring with the side rooms having carpeting
27. some outlets located along the walls
28. outlets located on the pillars
29. art displays on some floors
30. small lockers on the ground level
31. there is a rail on the ground level right under the bottom of the stair case
32. signs saying what wing you are in; ex. East Atrium
33. welcome signs by stairs and elevator
34. on the ground level there are metal plates with different languages etched on them
35. on the ground level there are lights built into the floor located along side the stairs going up to the 1st floor
36. the six levels of book storage can be seen threw glass windows
37. there is one elevator button located between the two elevator doors
38. each step has two stripes of the skid grips
39. there is a theft alarm system located by each ground door
40. there are handicap buttons at the doors
41. bookcases on some levels
42. trash and recycling bins on each level
43. vending machine on ground level
44. covers for the outlets on the floors that are not located under a table
45. some of the walls are wood
46. there is a printer by the computers
47. there is lighting that hangs and lighting that is built into the ceiling
48. large plant on the ground level
49. internet hook up by computers
50. Buck ID withdraw machine on ground level
McDonough: Introduction
Color
Monday, January 31, 2011
Heskett Chapter 7 and 8
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Designs With Accessibility In Mind
Hunting Down Design
The Barcelona Chair was designed by Mis van de Rohe. The chair's frame was initially suppose to be bolted together but stainless steal was used instead and this allowed for the metal to be formed without seams.
Gerrit Rietveld designed the Red and Blue Chair. In 1918, after starting his own furniture factory, he changed the colors of the chair after being influenced by the De Stijl movement.
Peter Eisenman was the designer of the Wexner Center. The double passageway represents the Columbus street grid.
Philip Johnson designed the Math Tower.
The William Oxley Thompson Memoral Library was renovated by Acock and Associates. The renovation included getting rid of hazardous materials and also expanding the 1977 edition of the library.
http://efdsgnw11.blogspot.com/ Elissa F.
http://kursinskis.blogspot.com/ Nick K.
Our group prepared for the scavenger hunt by checking out the internet first to answer the clues that we did not know. After we found the answers we left Hopkins, and traveled as a group to each site and took each other's pictures. The additional research needed for interesting facts about the designs were finished individually on our own time.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Designer Investigation
Buckminster Fuller
- Fuller was a designer, inventor, poet, and futurist who learned by working at different industrial jobs. He was able to solve problems involving human shelter, nutrition, transportation, environmental pollution, and decreasing world resources. In order to solve these problems he was committed to do more with less and he did this by using new technology. He designed the 1927 Dymaxion House, which is referred to as Marshall-Field. The 1933 Dymaxion Car was also another of his designs. The 1947 Geodesic Dome was designed as an emergency shelter for the British War Relief Organization. The dome was designed to be able to be set up and took down easily. It also was made to cover a maximum amount of space without any internal supports. Now this is used as an inexpensive way to shelter homeless people in Africa, or to house a weather station in the Antartic. Along with all these accomplishments he has wrote 25 books.
Eero Saarinen
- Eero is an architect who followed in his father's foot steps. A lot of his early works were collaborations with his father. After his father passed away he renamed the family business to Eero Saarinen and Associates. His architecture has been characterized by expressive sculpture forms and his basic design ideas were of those of Modernism. When he was making a new project and a material that he wanted did not exist he would invent it. Eero was also a prize winning designer of furniture. He designed several different chairs which include: the Grasshopper lounge chair and ottoman, the Womb chair and ottoman, the Womb settee, and the Tulip chair or Pedestal chair. Some of his chairs were put into production by the Knoll furniture company. Other projects of his include the Trans World Air Lines Terminal at the John F. Kennedy Airport in New York, the John Deere Administrative Center, the Bell Laboratories headquarters, and Dulles International Airport. Jasper Morrison
- Jasper is an industrial designer who went to school at Kingston Polytechnic and the Royal College of Art. After he graduated in 1986 he opened his first office for design in London. As a designer he would travel around London on his moped and find small industrial workshops that would produce his products. These products were formed out of materials that have already been formed. Out of this process things like his flower pot table was made, this was a glass table that was helf up by flower pots. After doing this kind of work for a while companies like the German door handle maker, an Italian furniture manufacture, and a Swiss furniture company all commissioned his work. As a designer he tried to design every day house hold items that were lighter, softer, inclusive, and that generate light and space. These products were part of his Some New Items For The House collection. Jasper kept his connections with his friends that he went to school with. He would collaborate with his friends like James Irvine and Andreas Brandolini. Clients who hired him allowed him to experiment with new materials and technology. As a result he designed objects like the 1999 Low Pad Chair, 1956 Steel and Leather chair, and also the 1999 Air chair. He did not only design furniture, on his list of things he had designed included the tram system for the city of Hanover, this was a two year project for him. In 2000 he added a new studio in Paris to his work while he divided his time between Paris and London.
Edmondson, Amy C. A Fuller Explanation: the synergetic geometry of R. Buckminster Fuller. Boston:
Birkhauser, 1987.
Marks, Robert W. The Dymaxion World of Buckminster Fuller. Carbondale, Southern Illinois Univeristy
Press, 1960.
Muriel Emmonuel. Contemporary Architects. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1980.
Hoffman, Douglas R. From Maybeck to Megachurches. Architecture Week No. 61, 2001.
Morrison, Jasper. Everything But The Walls. Lars Muller 2002.
Dormer, Peter. Jasper Morrison. Phaidon Press, 1990.